Adverse Childhood Experiences and their Relationship to Adult Well-being, Disease, and...

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Adverse Childhood Experiences and their Relationship to Adult Well-being, Disease, and Death : Turning gold into lead. A collaborative effort between Kaiser Permanente and the Centers for Disease Control. U.S. Department of Justice - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Adverse Childhood Experiences and their Relationship to

Adult Well-being, Disease, and Death : Turning gold into lead

A collaborative effort between

Kaiser Permanente and the Centers for Disease Control

Robert F. Anda, M.D. Vincent J. Felitti, M.D.

U.S. Department of Justice Washington, DC December 12, 2012

ACE Study Design

Survey Wave 171% response (9,508/13,454) n=13,000 71% response

Survey Wave II n=13,000

All medical evaluationsabstracted

PresentHealth Status

Mortality National Death IndexMorbidity Hospital Discharges Doctor Office Visits Emergency Room Visits Pharmacy Costs

All medical evaluationsabstracted

vs. &

17,337 adults

Empirically Selected Categories of Adverse Childhood Experiences

Abuse, by Category Psychological (by parents) 11% Physical (by parents) 28% Sexual (anyone) 22%

Major Neglect, by Category Emotional 15% Physical 10%

Household Dysfunction, by Category Alcoholism or drug use in home 27% Loss of biological parent <18 23% Depression or mental illness in home 17% Mother treated violently 13% Imprisoned household member 5%

Prevalence (%)

Who would ever suspect – without routinely asking

Smoking to Self-Medicate

The Functionality of ‘dysfunctional’ behavior

Childhood Experiences vs. Adult Alcoholism

0

1

23

4+

Health Risks

ACE Score vs. Intravenous Drug Use

p<0.001p<0.001

Health Risks

Childhood Experiences Underlie Later Suicide

1122

00

33

4+4+

Death

ACE Score and theACE Score and theRisk of Risk of PerpetratingPerpetrating Domestic Domestic

ViolenceViolence__________________________________

Ris

k o f

Per

p etr

atio

n (%

)

0

5

10

15Women Men

0 1 2 3 4 >5 0 1 2 3 4 >5

ACE Score

Well-being

Turning Research into Practicea beginning

• Comprehensive biomedical evaluation provides a net 11% reduction in DOVs in the subsequent year.

• Comprehensive bio-psycho-social evaluation, which incorporates ACE Study findings, provides a 35% reduction in DOVs in the subsequent year compared to the prior year. (125,000 patient sample)

Imagine the possibilities!

What Can We Do Today?• Routinely seek a history of traumatic childhood

experiences from allall patients, inmates, and children in foster care.

• Acknowledge their reality by asking, “How has this How has this affected you later in life?affected you later in life?””

• Develop programs for primary prevention.

Further InformationFurther Informationwww.acestudy.org

http://www.cdc.gov/NCCDPHP/ACE

Google Scholar (search: Felitti or Anda or ACE Study)

VJFMDSDCA@mac.com

AVAHealth.org (Detailed DVD)

www.ACEsTooHigh.com (useful blog on the subject)

Recommended